4 resultados para Self-efficacy in mathematics
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
In this work self-assembling model systems in aqueous solution were studied. The systems contained charged polymers, polyelectrolytes, that were combined with oppositely charged counterions to build up supramolecular structures. With imaging, scattering and spectroscopic techniques it was investigated how the structure of building units influences the structure of their assemblies. Polyelectrolytes with different chemical structure, molecular weight and morphology were investigated. In addition to linear polyelectrolytes, semi-flexible cylindrical bottle-brush polymers that possess a defined cross-section and a relatively high persistence along the backbone were studied. The polyelectrolytes were combined with structural organic counterions having charge numbers one to four. Especially the self-assembly of polyelectrolytes with different tetravalent water-soluble porphyrins was studied. Porphyrins have a rigid aromatic structure that has a structural effect on their self-assembly behavior and through which porphyrins are capable of self-aggregation via π-π interaction. The main focus of the thesis is the self-assembly of cylindrical bottle-brush polyelectrolytes with tetravalent porphyrins. It was shown that the addition of porphyrins to oppositely charged brush molecules induces a hierarchical formation of stable nanoscale brush-porphyrin networks. The networks can be disconnected by addition of salt and single porphyrin-decoratedrncylindrical brush polymers are obtained. These two new morphologies, brush-porphyrin networks and porphyrin-decorated brush polymers, may have potential as functional materials with interesting mechanical and optical properties.
Resumo:
The corrosion of metallic materials is a crucial issue on an economical and ecological scale. Corrosion protection becomes then necessarily needed. The main focus of the thesis is to develop stimuli-responsive nanocontainers for self-healing in corrosion protection. A nanocontainer is efficient if distinct payloads can be selectively released via different stimuli because unwanted and unspecific release can be avoided. For anti-corrosion, the wanted nanocontainer is the one able to release its self-healing agents or corrosion inhibitors upon change of pH- or/and redox-potential due to the variation of these two signals at the corroded sites. Conducting polymers such as polyaniline (PANI) were chosen for building the shell of capsules due to their important characteristics of being both pH- and redox responsive.
Resumo:
Therapeutic vaccination for chronic hepatitis B in the Trimera mouse modelrnRaja Vuyyuru and Wulf O. BöcherrnHepatitis B is a liver disease caused by Hepatitis B virus (HBV). It ranges in severity from a mild illness, lasting a few weeks (acute), to a serious long-term (chronic) illness that can lead either to liver disease or liver cancer. Acute infection is self limiting in most adults, resulting in clearance of virus from blood and liver and the development of lasting immunity. However 5% of acutely infected patients do not resolve primary HBV infection, leading to chronic infection with persistent viral replication in the liver. The strength of the initial antiviral immune response elicited to Hepatitis B determines the subsequent clinical outcome. A strong and broad T cell response leads to spontaneous resolution. Conversely, a weak T cell response favours viral persistence and establishment of chronic disease. While treatments using interferon-alpha or nucleos(t)ide analogues can reduce disease progression, they rarely lead to complete recovery. The lack of a suitable small animal model hampered efforts to understand the mechanisms responsible for immune failure in these chronic patients.rnIn current study we used Trimera mice to study the efficacy of potential vaccine candidates using HBV loaded dendritic cells in HBV chronic infection in vivo. The Trimera mouse model is based on Balb/c mice implanted with SCID mouse bone marrow and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from HBV patients, and thus contains the immune system of the donor including their HBV associated T cell defect.rnIn our present study, strong HBV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses were enhanced by therapeutic vaccination in chronic HBV patients. These T cell responses occurred independently of either the course of the disease or the strength of their underlying HBV specific T cell failure. These findings indicate that the Trimera mouse model represents a novel experimental tool for evaluating potential anti-HBV immunotherapeutic agents. This in vivo data indicated that both the HBV specific CD4+ cell and CD8+ responses were elicited in the periphery. These HBV specific T cells proliferated and secreted cytokines upon restimulation in Trimera mice. The observation that these HBV specific T cells are not detectable directly ex vivo indicates that they must be immune tolerant or present at a very low frequency in situ. HBV specific T cell responses were suppressed in Trimera mice under viremic conditions, suggesting that viral factors might be directly involved in tolerizing or silencing antiviral T cell responses. Thus, combination of an effective vaccine with antiviral treatment to reduce viremia might be a more effective therapeutic strategy for the future. Such approaches should be tested in Trimera mice generated in HBV or HBs expressing transgenic mice before conducting clinical trials.rn
Resumo:
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Materialien und Aufbauten für Hybrid Solarzellen entwickelt und erforscht. rnDer Vergleich zweier bekannter Lochleitermaterialien für Solarzellen in einfachen Blend-Systemen brachte sowohl Einsicht zur unterschiedlichen Eignung der Materialien für optoelektronische Bauelemente als auch neue Erkenntnisse in Bereichen der Langzeitstabilität und Luftempfindlichkeit beider Materialien.rnWeiterhin wurde eine Methode entwickelt, um Hybrid Solarzelle auf möglichst unkomplizierte Weise aus kostengünstigen Materialien darzustellen. Die „Eintopf“-Synthese ermöglicht die unkomplizierte Darstellung eines funktionalen Hybridmaterials für die optoelektronische Anwendung. Mithilfe eines neu entwickelten amphiphilen Blockcopolymers, das als funktionelles Templat eingesetzt wurde, konnten mit einem TiO2-Precursor in einem Sol-Gel Ansatz verschiedene selbstorganisierte Morphologien des Hybridmaterials erhalten werden. Verschiedene Morphologien wurden auf ihre Eignung in Hybrid Solarzellen untersucht. Ob und warum die Morphologie des Hybridsystems die Effizienz der Solarzelle beeinflusst, konnte verdeutlicht werden. Mit der Weiterentwicklung der „Eintopf“-Synthese, durch den Austausch des TiO2-Precursors, konnte die Solarzelleneffizienz von 0.15 auf 0.4 % gesteigert werden. Weiterhin konnte die Übertragbarkeit des Systems durch den erfolgreichen Austausch des Halbleiters TiO¬2 mit ZnO bewiesen werden.rn